\ Clinical Toxicology, 38(4), 457-460 (2(J00) Witchcraft or Mycotoxin? The Salem Witch Trials Alan Woolf Harvard Medical School, Boston Children's Hospital, Massachusetts Poison Control System. Boston, Massachusetts ABSTRACT Background: The Salem witchcraft trials of 1692 have been studied by many historians looking for the complex social, political, and psychological determi- nants behind the community-wide hysteria that led to a travesty of justice and the deaths of 20 innocent Puritans. Recently, ergot poisoning has been put forth by some as a previously unsuspected cause of the bizarre behaviors of the young adolescent girls who accused tbe townsfolk of witcbcraft. In tbis essay tbe cir- cumstances bebind tbe ergot poisoning tbeory for tbis bistorical event are de- scribed. Wben tbe evidence is weigbed carefully botb pro and con, it seems unlikely tbat ergotism explains mucb of wbat went on in colonial Salem. INTRODUCTION hold. By October after the poor harvest, 11-year-old Abi- gail Williams, the Reverend's niece, was spending time The New England Puritans fonmed an insular society with their 2 Caribbean servants. Tituba and John Indian, and intensively enforced their theocratic way of life. The who told hair-raising, yet seductive, voodoo stories to autumn of 1691 was not a good harvest year for them. Abigail and 3 or 4 other 9-17-year-old girls. The girls The previous winter had been cold. Then a wet, warm were soon talking magic; they started writhing in pain, planting season was followed by a hot, stormy summer. insensate with convulsive twitching, occasionally accus- A failed harvest had forced Salem villagers to turn to ing fellow townsfolk of being witches who tormented rye grain to make their bread. Thomas Putnam, a well- them. regarded and prosperous Salem farmer whose swampy In his play The Crucible. Arthur Miller delivers a mas- land supplied much of the colony's rye flour, donated terful portrayal of the Salem witch hunt in the context of grain regularly to the Reverend Samuel Pams's house- societal intolerance, cruel vengeance, and ethical para- Correspondence: Dr. Alan Woolf, Massachusetts Poison Control System, IC Smith Building, Children's Hospital, 300 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02115. Tel: 617/355-6609; Fax: 617/738-0032; E-mail: [email protected] 457 Copyright © 2000 by Marcel Dekker, Inc. www.dekker.com 458 Woolf doxes. In the 2nd Act, Elizabeth Proctor, wife of the exis- pinching or otherwise harming them) and "critical tential hero of the play, John Proctor, delivers a stinging touch" (the spasms of the victims would end only if they summary of the fearful turn of events: were touched by the accused). Court-approved spectral The Deputy Governor promise hangin ' if they 'II not evidence provided by the girls of visions of witchcraft- confess. John. The town's gone wild, I think. She speak practicing townsfolk defined the "proof of such preter- of Abigail, and I thought she were a saint, to hear her. natural mischief. The girls readily complied with the 2 Abigail brings the other girls into the court, and where tests, often creating such pandemonium in the courtroom she walks the crowd will part like sea for Israel. And that the proceedings had to be halted. folks are brought before them, and if they scream and In March of 1692 the girls accused Martha Corey and howl and fall to the floor, the person's clapped in the jail Rebecca Nurse of bewitching them and actively practic- for bewitchin ' them. ' ing witchcraft in collusion with the devil. Both of these The Puritans lived in an era of belief in the devil as women were previously well respected in Salem. The a physical being who was incarnate, there to seduce them march to the gallows on Witches' Hill in Salem began from the path of righteousness. Bewitching was a gener- later in the spring. The court heard its first case on June ally recognized phenomenon in the 1600s, both in Europe 2nd, and convicted and hung its first witch, Mary Sibley, as well as in Puritan New England. The devil was an at Gallows' Hill on June 10th. The travesty did not end invisible but very real being, whose constant tests and until September 1692, with 20 "witches" convicted, sen- temptations were to be rebuffed by strict adherence to a tenced, and executed, 19 by hanging and one, Giles set of laws describing behavior and societal order. The Corey, by being crushed with stones. When asked, while diagnosis of bewitching was both clinical and analytical. his chest was being compressed with massive rocks, Clinically, stages of bewitching could be described. The whether or not he would confess to being a wizard and "preliminaries" involved intense spirituality, leading to bewitching the girls, Giles Corey refused the life-saving the onset of fainting and disordered speech. Intensifica- confession (those who confessed would be pardoned if tion of symptoms was associated with visual delusions they implicated other "witches") by simply answering and hallucinatory confrontation with spectral witches or ' "more weight.,'" and then died. The colony had sown dis- "familiars" (the devil presenting himself in animal trust, jealousy, superstition, and moldy grain; it reaped forms). Occasionally, the symptoms would wax and death and despair. The nightmare did not cease until the wane, interspersed with quiet days of boredom mixed Court of Oyer and Terminer adjourned in September with depression. Behaviors of a bewitched person fre- 1692, and the new Governor, Phipps, of the Massachu- quently included sensations of pricking, pinching, or setts Bay Colony suspended all indictments for witchcraft burning of the skin; fornication; animal imitation; odd and issued a general reprieve for the 150 innocents im- contortions; simulated flying or diving; paralysis and ri- prisoned in the spring of 1693. gidity; anorexia; the forced consumption of invisible flu- What caused this tragedy in the Salem village? It prob- ids; and physical assaults or verbal insults. ably was not mass hysteria, which would have to have By late December, 1691, 8 girls, including the niece been repetitive and lasting for months. It surely wasn't and daughter of Samuel Parris, were afflicted with "un- fraud, given the gravity of the charge and the youth of known distempers" of disorderly speech, odd postures the girls. Mental illness has been cited, but that would and gestures, and convulsive fits. One doctor suggested have to be contextual and involve the entire commu- that the girls might be bewitched. The minister resorted nity.-•'' to fasting and prayer. But a neighbor suggested that Ti- Some historians^" have postulated that the girls re- tuba bake a "witch cake" made of rye grain and dog sponsible for the travesty suffered from ergotism. The urine. Soon the village was awash with rumors of witch- Claviceps purpurea grows on a wide vaiiety of cereals: craft; the girls accused Tituba and 2 other women in Sa- rye, corn, wheat, rice, sorghum, barley, oats, and millet. lem, Sarah Good and Sarah Osgood, of witchcraft, that The word ergot comes from the French name for a roost- is, directing their spirits to visit and torture them by er's spur, which the sclerotia of the Claviceps resembles pinching and burning their skin. The 3 women were taken as the mass of mycelia grow to a length of 2-3 centime- into custody on February 29, 1692. The Court of Oyer ters.^ The sclerotia of the fungus grow on the rye flower, and Terminer was empowered and, after the consultation replacing the grain with a hard, purplish bundle of myce- of Cotton Mather and other clergy, determined that the lia that may contain as much as 1% ergot alkaloids.^ Fa- critical tests of witchery would be both "spectral evi- vorable growing conditions for ergot include a cold pre- dence" (the victim would see a ghost of the accused ceding winter and cloudy, wet spring, with fog and high Ergot Poisoning and Salem Witchcraft 459 humidity. Newly farmed low-lying marshland containing aches, painful muscular contractions, mania, delirium, ergot-infested wild grasses is more susceptible to ergot, and visual and auditory hallucinations. Chronic ergotism with winter rye a better host than spring rye/ has been associated with progression of seizures and de- Ergot alkaloids are potent 3,4-indole-substituted my- mentia. cotoxins: ergoline (I), lysergic acid derivatives (II) such Ergot poisoning can be diagnosed by a simple bedside as isoergine (lysergic acid amide) similar to LSD, and chemical test of urine. Ergot alkaloids all react with sul- clavine alkaloids (III).' More than 40 different alkaloids furic acid containing p-dimethyl aminobenzaldehyde to have been isolated from Claviceps; although some are yield a solution which, when mixed with ferric chloride, derived from lysergic acid, most are proline-containing produces an intense blue reaction known as the Van Urk peptides, with an ergoline ring structure derived from test.5-7 tryptophan.*" Besides the ergot alkaloids, the fungus also Epidemics of ergot poisoning have been recorded contains histamine, tyramine, acetaldehyde, acetylcho- throughout history. Morgan'- investigated an outbreak of line, and isoamylamine, all of which may contribute di- ergot poisoning in Manchester, England, in 1927 which rectly to the patient's toxic profile. Tall fescue grass, involved over 200 patients, most of whom had gangre- which causes gangrenous "fescue foot" and "summer nous signs, but also had headache, nervousness, and in- syndrome" of weight loss and systemic symptoms tense itching with the sensation of insects crawling along among livestock, has been linked to a nonclaviceps but their backs. All ate rye bread, as much as half a loaf per ergot alkaloid-producing endophyte.^ Ergot poisoning of day. Morgan measured ergotamines in the rye flour and grazing animals is a serious concem; it can cause retarded showed that a contaminated loaf contained up to 9 grains growth, abortion, stillbirth, lameness, gangrene, and of ergot.
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